About ACM Publications

For more than 60 years, the best and brightest minds in computing have come to ACM to meet, share ideas, publish their work and change the world. ACM's publications are among the most respected and highly cited in the field because of their longstanding focus on quality and their ability to attract pioneering thought leaders from both academia and industry.

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ACM Transitions to Full Open Access

A Message to the Computing Community About ACM's Transition to Full Open Access

ACM is pleased to share an important milestone for the computing field. As of January 2026, all ACM publications and related artifacts in the ACM Digital Library have been made open access. This change reflects the long-standing and growing call across the global computing community for research to be more accessible, more discoverable, and more reusable. This transition is the result of extensive dialogue with authors, SIG leaders, editorial boards, libraries, and research institutions worldwide. ACM is grateful for the community’s consistent advocacy for openness and its commitment to ensuring that computing knowledge is shared widely.

ACM Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems Welcomes Sudeep Pasricha as Editor-in-Chief

ACM Transactions on Embedded Computing Systems (TECS) has named Sudeep Pasricha as Editor-in-Chief for the term of April 1, 2026 to March 31, 2029. Pasricha is the Aram and Helga Budak Endowed Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, the Department of Computer Science, and the Department of Systems Engineering at Colorado State University.

Sudeep Pasricha

ACM Transactions on Algorithms Welcomes Michael A. Bender as Editor in Chief

ACM Transactions on Algorithms (TALG) has named Michael A. Bender as Editor-in-Chief for the term of December 1, 2026 to November 30, 2029. Bender is the John L. Hennessy Chaired Professor of Computer Science at Stony Brook University.

Michael A. Bender

ACM Games: Research and Practice Welcomes New Editors-in-Chief Catherine Flick and Laurissa Tokarchuk

ACM Games: Research and Practice welcomes Catherine Flick and Laurissa Tokarchuk as new Co-Editors-in-Chief. The appointment is from April 1, 2026 through March 31, 2029. Flick is a Professor of Ethics and Games Technology at the University of Staffordshire. Tokarchuk is a Senior Lecturer at Queen Mary University of London.

co-Eic's Catherine Flick and Laurissa Tokarchuk

From Passive to Participatory: How Liberating Structures Can Revolutionize Our Conferences

Our conferences face a growing crisis: an overwhelming flood of submissions, increased reviewing burdens, and diminished opportunities for meaningful engagement. With AI making paper generation easier than ever, we must ask whether the current model fosters real innovation or simply incentivizes more publications. In this article from the April Communications of the ACM Daniel Russo and Margaret-Anne Storey advocate for a shift from passive paper presentations to interactive, participatory formats.

Where Are the City Trees? Monitoring Urban Trees across the U.S. Using Generative AI

For years, conducting an urban tree inventory was a luxury only large, highly resourced cities could afford. A new AI-based approach not only brings this capability within reach to smaller cities but also requires significantly less time. In this article from the April issue of Communications of the ACM, Adnan Firoze et al. have created a multidisciplinary team to develop a first-of-its-kind computational method that can individually locate and maintain an inventory of trees in at least 330 US cities.

Call for Papers: CACM Practice Section

Communications of the ACM has long had a strong academic and research focus, but it also regularly publishes articles of interest to practitioners. CACM is promoting its new Practice section to be co-equal with its long-standing Research section. The new Practice section will accept submissions and publish articles of lasting interest that enhance practitioners’ understanding of computing and enhance their job performance. Visit the CACM Practice call page for more information, and pass the word onto your friends and colleagues who may be interested in contributing.

Call for Papers: CACM Practice Section

Program Merge: What's Deep Learning Got to Do with It?

If you regularly work with open-source code or produce software for a large organization, you're already familiar with many of the challenges posed by collaborative programming at scale. And the scale of the problem has gotten much worse. This is what led a group of researchers at MSR (Microsoft Research) to take on the task of complicated merges as a grand program-repair challenge—one they believed might be addressed at least in part by machine learning. To understand the thinking that led to this effort and then follow where that led, Erik Meijer and Terry Coatta spoke with three of the leading figures in the MSR research effort, called DeepMerge

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The Point is Addressing

ACM Queue’s "Research for Practice" serves up expert-curated guides to the best of computing research, and relates these breakthroughs to the challenges that software engineers face every day. In this installment, Daniel Bittman curates a collection of papers about "anything related to far-out memories." He includes more than 30 years of research, from single-address-space operating systems, to software-based distributed shared memory, to far memory offload, to single-level stores for persistent memory. The featured papers challenge assumptions about isolation, sharing and locality, transparency, and movement of memory and computation. The thread that ties all these selections together in Bittman's analysis is the topic of addressing, or how data references data.

CACM

Ubiquity’s Communication Corner Helps Improve Writing and Speaking Skills

Have you always wondered how you can improve your writing and communicate more effectively? Ubiquity, ACM's online magazine of critical analysis and in-depth commentary, offers Communication Corner, a monthy feature by Philip Yaffe, retired Wall Street Journal reporter and Ubiquity editorial board member. Each installment includes an essay on a fundamental aspect of effective writing or speaking; an exercise to help you practice writing on the topic being discussed; and an invitation to submit your exercise for possible critique.

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New Authoring Templates for ACM Publications

ACM has transitioned to new authoring templates. The new template consolidates all eight individual ACM journal and proceedings templates. The templates are updated to the latest software versions, have been developed to enable accessibility features, and use a new font set.

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ACM Boasts Strong Impact Factors

ACM publications had an impressive showing in the newest Journal Citation Reports from Clarivate Analytics. ACM Computing Surveys continued its impressive ascent, receiving an impact factor of 23.8, up from 16.6 in 2023, and placing it first out of the 143 journals in the Computer Science, Theory & Methods category. Communications of the ACM boasted continued strong performance, with an impact factor of 11.1, placing it first in the Computer Science, Hardware & Architecture category for the second year in a row; third of 131 titles in the Computer Science, Software Engineering category; and sixth of 143 journals in the Computer Science, Theory & Methods category.

ACM Boasts Strong Impact Factors

ACM Peer Reviewer Training and Certification

ACM's publications program is built on a foundation of high quality peer review. In this course for peer reviewers, you will learn the principles of peer review as well as details of the process and your responsibility within that process.

Take our Peer Reviewer Training course to become an ACM Certified Reviewer today.

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Publish in the ACM International Conference Proceedings Series

The ACM International Conference Proceeding Series (ICPS) provides a mechanism to publish the contents of conferences, technical symposia and workshops and thereby increase their visibility among the international computing community. The goal of this program is to enable conferences and workshops to cost effectively produce print proceedings for their attendees, while also providing maximum dissemination of the material through electronic channels, specifically, the ACM Digital Library.

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Overleaf Allows Authors to Collaborate

Overleaf is a free, cloud-based, collaborative authoring tool that provides an ACM LaTeX authoring template. Authors can write using Rich Text mode or regular Source mode. The platform automatically compiles the document while an author writes, so the author can see what the finished file will look like in real time. The template allows authors to submit manuscripts easily to ACM from within the Overleaf platform.

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Promote Your Work with Kudos

Kudos is a free service that you can use to promote your work more effectively. After your paper has been accepted and uploaded to the ACM Digital Library, you'll receive an invitation from Kudos to create an account and add a plain-language description. The Kudos “Shareable PDF” allows you to generate a PDF to upload to websites, such as your homepage, institutional repository, preprint services, and social media. This PDF contains a link to the full-text version of your article in the ACM DL, adding to download and citation counts.

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Proceedings of the ACM Series

Proceedings of the ACM (PACM) is a journal series that launched in 2017. The series was created in recognition of the fact that conference-centric publishing disadvantages the CS community with respect to other scientific disciplines when competing with researchers from other disciplines for top science awards and career progression, and the fact that top ACM conferences have demonstrated high quality and high impact on the field. See PACMs on Programming Languages, Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies, Measurement and Analysis of Computing Systems, and HCI.

Bringing You the World’s Computing Literature

The most comprehensive collection of full-text articles and bibliographic records covering computing and information technology includes the complete collection of ACM's publications. 

ACM Digital Library

Get Involved with ACM

ACM is a volunteer-led and member-driven organization. Everything ACM accomplishes is through the efforts of people like you. A wide range of activities keeps ACM moving: organizing conferences, editing journals, reviewing papers and participating on boards and committees, to name a few. Find out all the ways that you can volunteer with ACM.

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Open Access Publication & ACM

ACM exists to support the needs of the computing community. For over sixty years ACM has developed publications and publication policies to maximize the visibility, access, impact, trusted-source, and reach of the research it publishes for a global community of researchers, educators, students, and practitioners.

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